DJ Casey Kasem, 82, who suffers from dementia and is worth $80 million, was taken from a friend's home in Silverdale, Wash., to a hospital on June 1 as his wife, Jean Kasem, angrily hurled hamburger meat, muttering about King David and dogs. Her macabre outburst, meant to satirize the press -- and Kasem's family -- as canine carnivores devouring her dying husband, may have also been an allusion to the Bible's Psalm 59, attributed by some to King David: "Deliver me from my enemies...let them make a noise like a dog...let them wander up and down for meat."

Said Jean Kasem, "If you want to know why I did it, when a person is about to pass away, there are always rabid dogs."

Jean Kasem told Seattle's NBC affiliate KING 5 that in May, both LAPD and Silverdale's Kitsap County Sheriff found no abuse of Mr. Kasem. Kitsap Judge Jennifer Forbes ruled June 2 that Mrs. Kasem can bring Casey home to Silverdale with the doctor's okay. Jean Kasem thinks it's the legal system that has gone crazy. "The probate system in California is broken and vulnerable in facilitating corruption, and if no one wants to fix it, then I will," she said. "My husband is very happy and comfortable in our family, and has told me time and time again that he wishes to remain under my care and does not want a conservator. The fact that Sam Ingham III, a PVP [probate volunteer panel] attorney, brought with him an armed guard strikes with me as near psychotic."

"She is pathological," continues Naylor. "My daughters are trying very, very hard to bring him back [to health], to get the right medical care. When they saw him in Santa Monica [at a hospital] May 6, he recognized them and was very happy."

After that May 6 visit, Jean Kasem removed Mr. Kasem from the hospital and disappeared. Authorities located them in Silverdale. After Kerri Kasem saw her father again, the shock of his apparent decline after 24 days made her cry. "Casey has a 50 percent chance to make it six more months," says Deraney.

On June 3 and again on June 6, there will be hearings in Washington on the case. "On June 20, there is a hearing that will decide on the temporary [health] conservatorship Kerri has," says Naylor. "Let's just hope that Casey is still there for them to have this argument."

"I wish Casey and I could have worked it out," says Naylor, who divorced him because of his temper -- "I shouldn't say this, but he was a screamer" -- and still loves him and wants their children to see him before he dies. "Who knew that he would find this horrible woman? But he just didn't have the guts to leave her."